Sunday, May 12, 2013

Grey Owl Gallery New Paltz, NY

New Gallery in New York.   It will be nice to be back in the Hudson Valley on a regular basis.
Go see Paty down on Water Street!


Grey Owl Gallery

Water Street Market 10 Main St Suite 401, New Paltz (village), New York 12561

2013 Maine Home and Design Artist Issue

2013 Maine Home and Design artist listing double feature

I'm honored to be included in this years issue! Thanks to Britta for the invite and for the hard work putting together all of this!


2013 Artist Listing, Double Feature


FEATURE - April 2013
By Britta Konau



The passion, but also obsession, behind the urge to communicate in artistic terms. Some artists move between the visual arts and other avenues of expression, including writing, music, and dance. However, for most, creative diversity is more subtly realized.
Pursuing an idea with disregard to perceived boundaries between mediums and genres may feel natural to the artist but will often surprise onlookers who get a chance to view an artist's full scope of expression. This year's artist listing focuses on a selection of visual artists with more than one distinct body of work. They may work in more than one medium, shift between two and three dimensions, or switch from one subject matter to another, concurrently or over time. This shift can be as simple, or as complicated, as changing scale or moving between black-and-white and color.
         For some artists, shifting between studio and plein air practice results in different subjects and/or working styles. One line of work may be the result of observation, another of intuition or memory. In many cases, a specific theme simply calls for a particular means of realization, resulting in a variety of speeds and complexities of working across artworks. This becomes particularly obvious when an artist switches between techniques that are more intuitive on the one hand, as painting can be, and more rational ones on the other, embodied by some forms of photography, for instance. Even within a single medium, very different outcomes emerge as the artist consciously exercises varying levels of control.
         A desire for a straightforward shift in the physicality of working can also be at the root of a change of techniques. For some artists, switching back and forth between mediums and dimensions makes up a large part of the raison d'ĂȘtre for their work and turns it into an evolving process.
         Whatever an individual artist's reason for an expansion of artistic expression, it universally provides additional perspectives. While one work may appear radically different from another on the outside, each is really a natural continuation of its creator's concerns and interests.


COLIN BARCLAY
"My approach to painting has always been a fairly visceral one. I want to capture the mood of a story rather than the details, so I try to pare them down to a bare framework. I see the toy paintings as complementary to the landscapes; I like the mood they project, the play of light in the interior spaces."

FOR MORE:
barclaypaintings.com | Littlefield Gallery, littlefieldgallery.com | Gallery at Somes Sound, frenchmansbay.com

Early Fog, the Sea, 2012, oil on linen, 18" x 15"

Interior with Felix, 2012, oil on panel, 10" x 8" SOLD


Thursday, June 28, 2012

Littlefield Gallery

Im happy to say that Littlefield Gallery in Winter Harbor has accepted a couple of my new pieces.

oil painting of a storm at sunset over Newfoundland











Line Squall, Newfoundland
oil on panel21" x 11"

An oil painting by artist Colin Barclay of a vintage children's toy
Interior With Felix
oil on panel
8" x 10"
SOLD
an oil seascape painting by artist Colin Barclay of the sea near Newfoundland
The Sea, Newfoundland
oil on panel
30" x 30"
SOLD

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

something different


Interior with Felix
in progress
oil on panel 11 x 8

He's going to have a lush, ethereally toned room to hang out in, kinda like those early 20th C genre interior paintings. Its been fun to draw him, I used 4b pencil on primed panel and washed it in with paint thinner and brushwork. Sorta halfway drawing, halfway painting.



some background underpainting filled in here, I do them higher keyed now so that the final result wont be so greyed out.
Here's Felix nearly done. Maybe just fix a few bits here and there, make the base he sits on "read" better.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Commissioned Work


an oil painting of Pond Island, Maine by artist Colin Barclay
Pond Island
oil on panel
23 x 30



oil on panel by artist Colin Barclay
Twilight
oil on panel
30" x 30"


New Luminist oil painting by artist Colin Barclay
Evening
oil on panel
11" x 25"

Sunday, January 02, 2011

Elizabeth Moss Gallery, January 18,2011




oil painting of foggy afternoon on Gros Morne,Newfoundland by artist Colin Barclay
Fog,Gros Morne
oil on panel
6 x 12
SOLD


oil painting of storm over Schoodic Mountain, Maine by artist Colin Barclay
Spring Rain, Schoodic Range
oil on panel
10 x 7
SOLD


oil painting by artist Colin Barclay of placid evening sea near Newfoundland
Evening Sea, Newfoundland
oil on panel
10 x 20
SOLD


oil painting by artist Colin Barclay of calm morning sea near Twillingate
Dawn, Twillingate
oil on linen
8 x 18
SOLD


oil study by artist Colin Barclay of sea near Twillingate Newfoundland
Sea Study, Twillingate
oil on panel
6 x 12
SOLD


landscape painting by artist Colin Barclay of mountains near Gros Morne, Newfoundland
Gros Morne, Newfoundland
oil on panel
19 x 19



modern oil seascape by artist Colin Barclay of Long Point, Newfoundland
Long Point, Newfoundland
oil on panel
10 x 10
SOLD

Friday, December 31, 2010

Maine Home and Design magazine

oil painting by artist Colin Barclay showing view from Maine blueberry barrens

THE CANVAS- June 2010

by Suzette McAvoy

Colin Barclay, Sean Beavers and Lisa Creed

“He drew forth a phrase from his treasure and spoke it softly to himself: A day of dappled seaborne clouds.” -James Joyce, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
Colin Barclay, Storm on the Barrens, 2007, oil on paper laid to panel, 24” x 24”

Nature’s Emotive Power

Contemporary landscape painter Colin Barclay’s Storm on the Barrens brings to mind a line from the English romantic poet Percy Shelley: “Far clouds of feathery gold, shaded with deepest purple, gleam like islands on a dark blue sea.” Simply composed, yet richly layered with scumbled opaque colors and thin veils of sheer tint, Barclay’s radiant landscapes seem to channel the emotive power of nature.

A native of New York’s Hudson River Valley, Barclay has a deep appreciation for the natural beauty of the region, which in the opening decades of the nineteenth century gave rise to America’s first recognized school of landscape painting. Like his artistic forbears, Barclay seeks to acknowledge the awe-inspiring beauty of a world undisturbed by man. Now a resident of Maine, he travels frequently throughout the northeast and as far north as the Bay of Fundy in search of inspiration for his meditative images.
While decidedly modern in his aesthetic approach, Barclay freely acknowledges the historical origins of his art. In particular, he appreciates the work of the late-nineteenth-century artist George Inness, whom he quotes as saying, “the aim of a work of art is not to instruct, not to edify, but to awaken an emotion.” Not surprisingly Barclay also admires the Luminists—Fitz Henry Lane, William Trost Richards, Martin Johnson Heade, Sanford Gifford, and others—whose spare, refined compositions and poetic use of light communicate “deep emotional and spiritual content.”

Barclay’s artistry is revealed in the visual emphasis he places on the abstract elements of a scene. He consciously simplifies forms, clarifies shapes, and modulates color and light until “a kind of kinetic balance” is reached. “I never want to paint a static landscape where everything seems at rest,” he says, “I always push for the work to feel as if it’s suspended or tensed against itself—just caught in the midst of movement.”





Temporal Moments

Artist Sean Beavers paints a variety of themes—still lifes, landscapes, and figurative works. Yet no matter the subject, all of his exquisitely rendered images address the tension between beauty and despair. For him, painting provides the opportunity to address the temporality of life by capturing nature’s fleeting moments. “All life is temporary,” he says, “I think that’s part of the reason that I paint; to somehow delay that process, to hold on a little bit longer to a moment or thing that will never exist again.”
In Distant Hiding Place, Beavers shares with the viewer one of nature’s uniquely beautiful moments. A cloud hovers over a tidal outlet in the sand; the two forms echoing one another and conveying a sense of spiritual transcendence. The painting is part of an ongoing series called Whispers from the Voice of the Sky, and was created from a plein-air study produced on the beach in York. “When I study something in nature,” the artist says, “there is a connection or understanding that I can’t describe—the beauty just moves me. When I say beauty I don’t mean sweet or sentimental. Nature can be quite harsh at times, but there is always balance in it, something melodic to offset the dissonance.”
Beavers’s meticulous painting style reveals a strong expertise in drawing from life, a practice that he has pursued from childhood and from which he still derives “immeasurable inspiration.” He considers his work to be “symbolist,” and his hauntingly beautiful images move beyond representation into the manifold evocations of metaphor. “The subjects of my paintings usually represent something other than the objects themselves,” he says, “like dreams, desires, frustrations, spirit—whatever it is I’m thinking about at the time.” While his art is inspired by deeply personal intentions, it speaks to the universal quest for truth and beauty.

Sean Beavers, Distant Hiding Place, oil on canvas on panel, 30” x 30” Private collection









Infinite Seas and Endless Skies

In her paintings of the sea and sky, artist Lisa Creed seeks “to honor the numinous that surrounds us.” Although she now resides in North Carolina, Creed grew up spending summers on the coast of Maine and she returns each year to spend time at her family’s property in Surry. “I feel like I have absorbed the very coast that I grew up on into my bones,” she says.
It is from this deeply rooted sense of place that she draws inspiration for her lyrical, atmospheric images. Serving as visual testaments of her devotion to nature’s spiritualism, Creed’s semi-abstract paintings of the Maine shore convey her appreciation for the elemental and the infinite. “I may paint in the front field or in my studio,” she says, “but it is my memory that pours out onto the surface. It is that sense of wonder that I had as a kid and still have today. It is the power of the sky, sea, and land, and the shifting weather that intrigues me.” In painting after painting, Creed expresses her appreciation for the inimitable light and air of the Maine coast. It is her only landscape subject—she also paints abstractions—and her passionate dedication to the theme is revealed in the remarkable range she derives from the subject. The vast skies and endless seas are as seemingly various as nature’s own creations. Devoid of human presence or man-made structures, her coastal paintings celebrate the transitory, ever-shifting nature of weather, atmosphere, and light. In works such as On the Wing, sweeping veils of shimmering color define the surface of the water and give form to the cloud-filled sky. “It is without fail that various people will comment that my work has northern light in it,” says Creed. “They recognize that it is New England light, Maine light. It is impossible for me to not have that light I love in my work.”

Lisa Creed, On the Wing, 2006, acrylic on canvas, 42” x 42”